For the last week or so my Mac has been randomly kernel panicking.
My usage of the my laptop has not changed, so I have no idea why this started all of a sudden.
This is a MacBook Pro (13-inch, 2017, Four Thunderbolt 3 Ports) running Mojave 10.14.3

2 Answers
2

Seeing as a kernel panic is mainly caused by third party kernel extensions and you seem to have com.joshuawise.kexts.HoRNDIS which is for android tethering, I would suggest you start in recovery mode and disable that one. You will need to install the latest version of that if you use it, I guess.

How did I find out ? In kernel panic messages, all kext (kernel extensions, drivers) are listed. I looked for non-Apple extensions and you seem to have 3:

I was about to accept this as solution because I hadn't crashed all day after removing (both) HoRNDIS and CUDA, but then I crashed as I was about to click the check :/ I've updated the panic report.
– EpicbloodFeb 20 at 15:47

Was it after you upgraded to Mojave? Did you recently spill anything on the computer? Or was it dropped in any way?

What kind of peripherals do you have connected to the Mac? Did you change anything inside the Mac?

Is your computer overheating? Are you running a lot of labor intensive read/write operations?

Also take a look at this line in your report:

BSD process name corresponding to current thread: sysmond

This is telling you that the sysmond service was the last thing running before it went into kernel panic. This is the system monitor daemon. It probably is hogging up a lot of CPU, which has been known to happen in older OS's. It's possible that is the source of your issue.

I would check for the more obvious signs first like the ones I stated, and then if it comes down to it, do the following:

First do an NVRAM reset

If above didn't work, do a clean Mojave install.

If that doesn't work either, take to Apple.

You might have nothing connected to the computer, and there is no third party kernel extension running, so this could point to a hardware issue, and might need to be taken back to Apple.